Sunday People

Carnoustie can ‘beast’ the best of players

- By Nick Dougherty

12 events, before hitting some form in recent weeks.

He said: “It is nice to wake up and not be chomping pain-killers and to be able to do the simple things I want to do. “Everything kind of spirals. “I was in a lot of pain. Bending over, picking the kids up – that kind of stuff. My back was hurting.

“I tore my shoulder. You tear your shoulder and your swing is dodgy.

“I have messed up my knee a little bit and then your neck goes. It just rolls on. It is not the primary injury necessaril­y, it is the secondary stuff that people don’t realise.

“Walking is a massive thing. We walk 10 to 12 miles a day.

“If you are injured in an area and walking cagily, you get a secondary problem through other areas and they are CARNOUSTIE has two nicknames – one is “Car-nasty”, the other is “The Beast”.

Whichever one you use, it all adds up to the same – particular­ly when the wind howls in from the North Sea – it can drive the best to distractio­n.

I remember in ’99 watching one of my heroes, Greg Norman, hacking at the hay in fury as he attempted to blast his way out of trouble.

The man they called the “Great White Shark” rendered toothless – it was brutal. The Royal and Ancient took a huge amount of flak for that. They left the grass long. It blew and blew.

The eventual winner that year – Paul Laurie won after a play-off with my pal Jean van der Velde and Justin Leonard – was six over for the tournament. Which just shows how difficult it had been.

Eight years later, the authoritie­s erred on the side of caution and the greens were set up in the players’ favour.

But this time it had been hot and the weather had burnt off a lot of the long stuff. Judging by the heatwave we’ve been going through, I wouldn’t be surprised to see the same happen again this year.

But that won’t mask the fact that this is one of the most challengin­g courses anywhere in the world.

For anyone to succeed, they have to be a strong driver with an equally strong mentality. The fairways are very tight. You can easily bounce into trouble – and it might not have “It is a completely different ball flight. Better than the Masters? The ball flight been your fault – that’s the rub sometimes with links golf. Hit a bump on the fairway and you’ll be playing you’re second out of the long stuff. It’s how you cope with that which can define your score.

But at Carnoustie, it’s slightly different. The last hour can define how you fare.

You can play a lovely round of golf and be walking up to the 15th tee under par.

But there is absolutely no reason to think that you will be under par by the time your ball drops on the 18th.

The momentum here doesn’t switch between the players each hole. It’s every shot.

Look at the high drama served up last time here between Padraig Harrington and Sergio Garcia. It was impossible to predict which way that would go.

And, of course, everyone remembers Jean (van der Velde) who remains a close friend of mine.

Forget the shoes and socks (left). A few inches higher with his third shot on that final hole 19 years ago and he wouldn’t have landed in the Barry Burn and dropped three shots. He would have won The Open. But, and I say this as a warning with the message clear, that is what Carnoustie can do to you.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom